Everybody knows that when you’re pregnant you don’t drink coffee, smoke cigarettes or take pain medications, right? And no matter how tempting that glass of wine might look, as a conscientious mom-to-be you wouldn’t think of drinking alcohol during pregnancy. For a mother, the responsibilities of parenting start from the second she finds out she’s pregnant, and most moms take that responsibility very seriously, doing all they can to protect their babies.

Why is it, then, that mothers who are admonished not to take anything stronger than Paracetamol during pregnancy are also advised to get toxic vaccines? The Centers for Disease Control has long recommended that pregnant women be vaccinated against the flu, for example, and yet one of their own studies recently confirmed an alarming link between spontaneous miscarriages and the influenza vaccine.

The study reviewed data for the 2010-11 and 2011-12 flu seasons. Women vaccinated with the inactivated influenza vaccine (IIV) in the 2010-2011 season had 3.7-fold greater odds of experiencing a spontaneous abortion within 28 days than women not receiving the vaccine. Over the entire study period (2010 to 2012), the odds for a spontaneous abortion for vaccinated women were 2.0 times greater than for those women not receiving the flu vaccine. …

Most alarmingly, in women who received the H1N1 vaccine in the previous flu season, the odds of spontaneous abortion in the 28 days after receiving a flu vaccine were 7.7 times greater. For every flu season, starting in 2010-2011, there has been an H1N1-type virus included in regular flu shots in the United States.

A study published in the journal Maternal and Child Health earlier this year, found that women face very difficult decisions when it comes to medications during pregnancy and require specific information to help them make wise choices. The study abstract noted that women surveyed were particularly concerned about the effect of any medications taken during pregnancy on the development of their babies, but many also expressed concerns about possible effects on their own health. They also indicated that if the risks associated with a medication were unknown, they would not be willing to take it.

A study in the Human Environmental and Toxicology journal found that the multiple-strain inactivated flu vaccine that contains mercury, was the direct cause of a 4,250 percent rise in fetal deaths during the pandemic flu season of 2009.

Interestingly, while doctors and the CDC portray vaccines as totally safe for pregnant women, the vaccine manufacturers always include notes in the vaccine package inserts warning that safety in pregnancy has not been established.

As an example of this, the Flulaval shot insert states:

Safety and effectiveness of Flulaval have not been established in pregnant women, nursing mothers or children.

There was a time when the government was extremely cautious about vaccinating or using pregnant women in clinical trials. Back in 1998, for example, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advised that reproductive toxicity studies be conducted in animal models for every single vaccine that would be administered to pregnant women before any Phase 1 clinical trials could be conducted on pregnant women.

Now there are vaccines that were only tested on pregnant women after the vaccine was already licensed – and then the trials were conducted by the manufacturers themselves, who could hardly be called unbiased.